Provided by: aolserver4-dev_4.5.1-18.1_amd64 bug

NAME

       Ns_ConnPrintfHeader,  Ns_ConnPuts,  Ns_ConnSend,  Ns_ConnSendChannel,  Ns_ConnSendDString, Ns_ConnSendFd,
       Ns_ConnSendFdEx, Ns_ConnSendFp, Ns_ConnWrite, Ns_WriteConn - Routines to write data to the connection

SYNOPSIS

       #include "ns.h"

       int
       Ns_ConnPrintfHeader(conn, fmt, ...)

       int
       Ns_ConnPuts(conn, string)

       int
       Ns_ConnSend(conn, bufs, nbufs)

       int
       Ns_ConnSendChannel(conn, chan, nsend)

       int
       Ns_ConnSendDString(conn, dsPtr)

       int
       Ns_ConnSendFd(conn, fd, nsend)

       int
       Ns_ConnSendFdEx(conn, fd, off, nsend)

       int
       Ns_ConnSendFp(conn, fp, nsend)

       int
       Ns_ConnWrite(conn, buf, len)

       int
       Ns_WriteConn(conn, buf, len)

ARGUMENTS

       char           *buf           (in)      Pointer to bytes of specified length.

       Ns_Conn        conn           (in)      Open connection on which to send content.

       Ns_DString     dsPtr          (in)      Pointer to initialized dstring with content to send.

       int            fd             (in)      File descriptor opened for read.

       char           *fmt           (in)      Pointer to sprintf style format string which specifies the  types
                                               of the remaining variable number of arguments.

       FILE           *fp            (in)      Stdio FILE pointer opened for read.

       int            len            (in)      Length of bytes pointed to by buf.

       int            nbufs          (in)      Number of iovec structures pointed to by bufs.

       int            nsend          (in)      Number of bytes to send from object.

       off_t          off            (in)      Offset into open file descriptor to begin sending content.

       char           *string        (in)      Pointer to null-terminated string.

       struct iovec   bufs           (in)      Pointer to array of iovec structures.

       Tcl_Channel    chan           (in)      Pointer to Tcl channel open for read.
_________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

       These  functions  are  the  lowest  level routines which support sending content directly to a connection
       through the connection's communications driver (e.g., nssock or nsopenssl).  They all attempt to send the
       entire  requested  output,  blocking  the  calling thread up to the driver-specific timeout if necessary.
       Header data queued for send with Ns_ConnQueueHeaders, if any, will be  sent  before  the  requested  user
       data.

       In  practice,  higher  level  routines  such  as the Ns_ConnReturn functions and Ns_ConnFlush are used to
       generate complete responses instead of these lower level routines.  The higher level  routines  construct
       appropriate  headers, manage output character encoding, and support gzip compression, calling these lower
       level routines as needed.

       int Ns_ConnPrintfHeader(conn, fmt, ...)
              Contrary to it's name, this routine has nothing to do with HTTP headers.  Instead, it simply calls
              Ns_DStringPrintf with a temporary dstring, the given fmt argument, and any variables arguments and
              then calls Ns_ConnSendDString with the temporary dstring.  The result is NS_OK  if  all  formatted
              bytes were sent, otherwise NS_ERROR.

       int Ns_ConnPuts(conn, string)
              This  routines  sends  a  null-terminated  string to the client and returns NS_OK if successful or
              NS_ERROR on failure.  It is equivalent to Ns_WriteConn(conn, string, strlen(string)).

       int Ns_ConnSend(conn, bufs, nbufs)
              This is the lowest level routine which calls the connection's  communication  driver  to  send  an
              array  of  zero  or more buffers.  The result is the total number of bytes sent which should equal
              the total requested data or -1 on error.  The number of bytes sent from  queued  header  data,  if
              any,  is  not  included  in the result.  The bufs argument is a pointer to an array of nbufs iovec
              structures.  The usage is similar to the the Unix writev system  call.   The  iovec  structure  is
              defined as:

                struct iovec {
                   void            *iov_base;
                   size_t           iov_len
                }

       Each element of the structure should contain a pointer to valid user data specified by iov_base of length
       iov_len.  A NULL value for iov_base and a cooresponding value of zero  for  iov_len  is  valid  and  will
       simply be skipped over when sending the total requested bytes.

       int Ns_ConnSendChannel(conn, chan, nsend)
              This  routine copies nsend bytes from the open Tcl channel to the connection.  The result is NS_OK
              if all bytes available in the open channel or all bytes requested where sent, otherwise NS_ERROR.

       int Ns_ConnSendDString(conn, dsPtr)
              This routines sends all content which exists in the dstring pointed to by  dsPtr.  The  result  is
              NS_OK if all bytes where sent, otherwise NS_ERROR.

       int Ns_ConnSendFd(conn, fd, nsend)
              This  routine  copies  nsend bytes from the open file descriptor to the connection.  The result is
              NS_OK if all bytes available in the open  file  or  all  bytes  requested  where  sent,  otherwise
              NS_ERROR.  Copying begins from the current offset.

       int Ns_ConnSendFp(conn, fp, nsend)
              This  routine  copies nsend bytes from the open stdio FILE to the connection.  The result is NS_OK
              if all bytes available in the open file or all bytes requested  where  sent,  otherwise  NS_ERROR.
              Copying begins from the current offset.

       int Ns_ConnSendFdEx(conn, fd, off, nsend)
              This  routine  copies  nsend bytes from the open file descriptor to the connection.  The result is
              NS_OK if all bytes available in the open  file  or  all  bytes  requested  where  sent,  otherwise
              NS_ERROR.   Copying  begins  from  the  offset given in the off parameter.  (NOTE: This routine is
              currently not supported on Win32 and always returns NS_ERROR).

       int Ns_ConnWrite(conn, buf, len)
              This routine will send a single buffer pointed to by buf of length len.  The result is the  number
              of  bytes  sent  or  -1  on  error.  It is equivalent to calling Ns_ConnSend with an single struct
              iovec.

       int Ns_WriteConn(conn, buf, len)
              This routine will send a single buffer pointed to by buf of length len.  The result  is  NS_OK  if
              all  content  was  sent, otherwise NS_ERROR.  It is equivalent to calling Ns_ConnWrite and mapping
              the bytes sent or -1 error result to NS_OK or NS_ERROR.

EXMPLES

       The following example demonstrates crafting some headers and then sending two buffers of data.   In  this
       case,  Ns_ConnSend will actually call the communications driver with three buffers, the first pointing to
       header data queued for send by Ns_ConnQueueHeaders followed by the two user data  buffers.   The  result,
       assuming all three buffers are resonably small, is likely an efficient single send on the socket:

                struct iovec iov[2];
                int contentlength;

                iov[0].iov_base = firstbuf;
                iov[0].iov_len  = firstlen;
                iov[1].iov_base = secondbuf;
                iov[1].iov_len= secondlen;
                contentlength = iov[0].iov_len + iov[1].iov_len;
                Ns_ConnSetRequiredHeaders(conn, "text/html", contentlength);
                Ns_ConnQueueHeaders(conn, 200);
                if (Ns_ConnSend(conn, iov, contentlength) != contentlength) {
                   ... error, e.g., connection drop ...
                }
                Ns_ConnClose(conn);

SEE ALSO

       Ns_ConnClose(3), Ns_ConnReturnHtml(3), Ns_ConnFlush(3)

KEYWORDS

       connection, i/o